Spy chief detailed Iraq worries

Sir Richard DearloveThe former MI6 boss denied he was “too close” to ministers
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The Iraq inquiry has published details of evidence given by former spy chief Sir Richard Dearlove.

Sir Richard, head of MI6 in the run-up to the 2003 invasion, said suggestions that he became too close to Tony Blair were “complete rubbish”.

Assessment of Iraq’s weapons threat was “incomplete”, he said, and there was a “convincing” case that Saddam Hussein had “weaponised” chemical agents.

Tony Blair is due to give evidence to the inquiry again on Friday.

The former prime minister is expected to be asked about private conversations he had with President Bush over Iraq when he is recalled to give evidence, as well as the legal basis for the 2003 war and intelligence about the threat posed by Iraq.

When he first appeared before the inquiry a year ago, Mr Blair said he had “no regrets” about taking the UK to war and believed the world was a safer place after Saddam – who he described as a “monster” – had been overthrown.

Ahead of Mr Blair’s second appearance, the inquiry has been releasing a number of declassified documents and details of evidence given in private.

In his evidence – given behind closed doors and substantial parts of which were redacted – Sir Richard denied that he had become “too close” to ministers in the run-up up to the Iraq invasion and that this had impaired his judgement.

“A lot of people were jealous of my position, and therefore, I think, motivated to talk about it, including the foreign secretary of the day”

Sir Richard Dearlove

“I’m well aware of the criticisms of me, that I had too close a relationship with the prime minister and all this. This is complete rubbish. The Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) generally doesn’t “do ministers”,” he said.

He added: “I wasn’t sipping Chardonnay in the evenings with Tony Blair, or nipping off to have breakfast with him in Chequers.

“I was going to meetings, as the head of SIS, to discuss SIS business in relation to the development of national security policy. I think that the record shows that absolutely clearly.”

“A lot of people were jealous of my position, and therefore, I think, motivated to talk about it, including the foreign secretary of the day. You know, this was a very difficult and awkward period for me.”

As head of the Secret Intelligence Service – and known as “C” – he was a key figure in assessing intelligence about Iraq’s weapons capability.

Sir Richard said he did not believe there was a “complete picture” of what weapons Iraq had possessed. He said he “absolutely” believed that Iraq had VX nerve gas capable of being deployed and that this material had never been found.

“Had even we found one artillery rocket delivery system with VX, what we are talking about might be viewed very differently,” he said. “I think that the intelligence on VX, if you actually put it together — and no one has done this — is very compelling.”

No weapons of mass destruction were found after the Iraq conflict.

The inquiry has said it will only hold hearings in private when doing so in public would threaten national security and harm international relations.

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PM’s ‘sympathy’ for disabled girl

Celyn Vincent

Riven Vincent, who has three other children, met David Cameron during the election campaign last year

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The prime minister has said he has “every sympathy” with the family of a disabled six-year-old after her mother accused him of not doing enough to help families in need of respite care.

Riven Vincent, of Staple Hill, near Bristol, said she could not cope and might put her daughter Celyn into care.

She had criticised David Cameron and said her family was “crumbling”.

Mr Cameron denied government austerity measures were preventing the family getting more help.

He said he would be looking into the case “very closely”.

The prime minister’s official spokesman said Mr Cameron had sent a letter to Ms Vincent.

Her daughter is blind, quadriplegic and has cerebral palsy and epilepsy.

Mr Cameron had visited Ms Vincent during the General Election campaign after an exchange on the mothers’ website Mumsnet.

Ms Vincent criticised Mr Cameron, saying she had hoped following his visit he “would have done more to protect families like ours”.

UK prime minister David Cameron

Mr Cameron said he did not believe that Riven Vincent’s case was related to the wider public service cuts

She added: “The money the government has allocated for short breaks and respite care – £800m over four years – is not enough and worse still it’s not going to be ring-fenced.”

Mr Cameron said he did not believe the case was connected to public service cuts.

On Wednesday Ms Vincent had posted on the website Mumsnet: “Have asked ss (social services) to take dd (dear daughter) into care.

“We get 6 hours respite a week. They have refused a link family. They have refused extra respite. I cant cope.”

At least 1,300 Mumsnet users have replied with messages of sympathy.

South Gloucestershire Council said it had now arranged a meeting with her.

A spokesman said it had been supporting Ms Vincent and her family since Celyn was a baby and there had been no reduction in the care the council provided.

The spokesman said: “This package of care is reviewed regularly and has increased according to need over the last six years. There have been no reductions in the care provided to Celyn and her family.”

They added: “We recognise that there are times when difficulties can appear overwhelming and we hope that we can resolve the present difficulties in the best interest of the family.”

Jack Lopresti, Conservative MP for Filton and Bradley Stoke, said he had visited Ms Vincent and Celyn at their home with a South Gloucestershire councillor in the summer following an email exchange.

He said the councillor had raised the issue at a council meeting and they had written to the Minister for Disabled People.

Mr Lopresti said a case worker had visited Ms Vincent’s house to see what support could be offered.

He said social workers had gone to the house on Thursday.

He said: “Tomorrow I am going to see the leader of the council to see what we can do to give the family the help they need.”

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Customers queue at ATM as it ‘spits out’ money

Queue of people at ATM in Fintry Road, DundeeA long queue formed at the ATM at Scotmid in Fintry Road, Dundee

Dozens of people flocked to a cash machine in Dundee after it started “spitting out” money, it has emerged.

Police were called to the Scotmid branch in Fintry Road after staff noticed a crowd gathering outside the ATM at the front of the shop.

A witness told the BBC Scotland news website the machine was paying out double the amounts requested.

The ATM, which is operated by Bank Machine Ltd, was put out of commission shortly afterwards.

One witness, who asked not to be named, said: “The machine was spitting out money.

“There were 50 or 60 people queuing outside the shop and people were running around with smiles on their faces, saying it was paying out double the amount people were asking for.”

Scotmid said the ATM was operated independently and was not connected to the store.

A spokesman said: “Some of our staff at our store noticed large queues forming outside and they became a bit concerned. They could not get close enough to the machine to check out what was going on so they did exactly the right thing and called the police.”

Tayside Police confirmed they attended the scene, adding there had been no incidents.

Bank Machine Ltd was not available for comment.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fewer UK students getting places

Graduates LSE (file pic)Competition for university places has intensified in recent years
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Official figures show that the number of UK students accepted onto university courses dropped last year, as record numbers failed to get places.

More than 210,000 would-be students were left without a university place in the UK, final figures from the admissions body Ucas show.

The number of British students accepted onto courses dropped by 400, despite an increase in international students.

Some universities welcomed the rise, warning against cuts in student visas.

But the Million+ group of new universities warned of a “worrying picture”, saying the acceptance rate for all applicants had fallen from 78% to just 70% in six years.

There are fears of heavy demand for places this year, as students rushing to beat tuition fee rises in 2012 compete with those who failed to get places in 2009-10.

Early figures for this year’s applications in January showed a 2.5% increase on 2009-10.

Last year saw record numbers of applications – 697,351, up 9% on the previous year.

But despite an extra 57,491 people applying in 2010, only an extra 5,475 people were accepted.

Of those, nearly a third of these were from the European Union, and the rest were from outside the EU.

It is the first time in three years that the number of UK students given places has dropped.

Students from within the EU apply to the same limited pool of places as home students, are eligible for student loans – and in Scotland do not have to pay tuition fees, the same as for Scottish students.

But places for international students from outside the EU are separate, and universities can set their own fees – some of which are much higher than for home students.

The 1994 group of leading universities said the 10% growth in international students was a “major success story”.

“Higher education is one the UK’s most successful export industries and today’s figures show that it is going from strength to strength,” said the group’s executive director Paul Marshall.

“However, this progress could be brought to an alarming halt if ministers follow through on plans to scrap all visas for international students taking courses below degree level,” he added.

The government has announced a consultation exercise on proposals to reduce the number of visas given to such students.

The 1994 group argues that many who come to the UK to do non-degree programmes stay on for higher level study.

However, Les Ebdon of the Million+ group warned that with high youth unemployment in the UK, those failing to get places faced a “double whammy”.

“The government’s failure to keep up with rising aspiration and to fund enough extra places, means that a whole generation of students will miss out on the life-changing opportunities that a university education provides,” he said.

Universities Minister David Willetts said: “Going to university has always been a competitive process and not all who apply are accepted.

“Despite this, we do understand how frustrating it is for young people who wish to go to university and are unable to find a place. There are other routes into a successful career.

“Our reforms will make part-time university study more accessible and we are also investing in new apprenticeship places, with an additional 75,000 being created by 2014.”

In England, an extra 10,000 places added in 2009-10 will be maintained this year, but will not be funded beyond that. Ministers say this is because a “demographic bulge” will be over and they will not be needed.

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IEA doubles global gas estimates

Roger HarrabinBy Roger Harrabin

The drilling rig of Cuadrilla Resources explores the Bowland shale for gas, four miles from Blackpool on January 17, 2011 in Blackpool, England.Getting gas from rocks is relatively easy, concerns about cost and the environment are emerging
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The world may have twice as much natural gas than previously thought, according to the rich nations’ think tank the International Energy Agency (IEA).

The world may have 250 years of gas usage at current levels thanks to “unconventional gas” from shale and coal beds, Anne-Sophie Corbeau, senior gas expert at the IEA told BBC News.

Estimates may even be revised upwards.

Studies are underway into newly-recoverable sources, Ms Corbeau said.

But she stressed that the totals were highly uncertain, and depended on price, technology and the accessibility of supplies.

“The gas story is huge,” she told BBC News.

“A few years ago the United States was ready to import gas. In 2009 it had become the world’s biggest gas producer. This is phenomenal, unbelievable.”

The US achieved the change through a technological breakthrough in which firms found a way of using tiny explosions to free gas previously trapped in a common rock – shale.

“Not all of this will be recoverable”

Anne-Sophie Corbeau IEACan Europe benefit from shale gas?

Miss Corbeau said other nations were now rushing to replicate the US success by exploiting gas currently trapped in various types of rock where it was thought to be impossible to access.

She said conventional natural gas supplies were assured for 60 years – with maybe a further 60 years if engineers could get to other supplies.

She admitted there is great uncertainly about how much unconventional gas is possible to exploit, but said the best estimate is that new sources will stretch gas supplies to 250 years at current levels.

“The resources are really huge,” she said.

“We probably have 920 trillion cubic metres – that is more than 300 times the current annual demand for gas.

“Not all of this will be recoverable, but any country that develops new gas supplies will have a global impact on gas availability and price, as gas markets are all inter-connected.”

Some sceptics believe that unconventional gas is being “talked up”.

Firms wishing to exploit shale gas are already finding opposition from people living near gas deposits, some of which are in urban areas.

Shale gas needs many more drilling sites than conventional gas, which is obtained from porous rocks that allow the gas to flow into the bore without the need for explosive persuasion.

The revolution in unconventional gas is likely to affect climate change policy.

The IEA’s chief economist Fatih Birol told BBC News that natural gas, which has only half the carbon emissions of coal, is already competing for priority with clean renewable energy.

Gas companies in Europe also insist it offers a cost-effective solution.

The IEA said Australia is taking the lead on unconventional gas with China, India and Indonesia close behind.

Firms in rich nations are pressing governments to allow them the same level of subsidies as renewables if they agree to capture and store their carbon emissions in rocks underground to prevent them warming the planet.

Today the World Meteorological Organisation said climate change was firmly underway.

It confirmed that 2010 had equalled the hottest year on record, with record low Arctic ice for December.

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Johnson quits frontline politics

Alan JohnsonAlan Johnson has served as shadow chancellor since October
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Shadow chancellor Alan Johnson is resigning from Labour leader Ed Miliband’s frontbench team, citing “personal” reasons.

He is replaced by Ed Balls, previously the shadow home secretary. Mr Balls’ wife, Yvette Cooper, takes over the home affairs brief.

Mr Johnson said he had “found it difficult” to cope with issues in his private life while shadow chancellor.

His resignation comes after just three-and-a-half months in the job.

It follows several recent gaffes when discussing tax and economic matters, including appearing in an interview not to know the rate of National Insurance paid by employers.

Mr Johnson, a former postman and trade union leader, was also reported to have clashed with his party leader over the policy of introducing a graduate tax to replace university tuition fees.

In a statement, the Hull West MP said: “I have decided to resign from the shadow cabinet for personal reasons to do with my family.

“I have found it difficult to cope with these personal issues in my private life whilst carrying out an important frontbench role.

NEW SHADOW CABINETShadow chancellor – Ed BallsShadow home secretary – Yvette CooperShadow foreign secretary – Douglas AlexanderShadow Cabinet Office minister – Tessa JowellShadow work and pensions secretary – Liam ByrneAssessing the political impact In Quotes: Johnson quits reaction At a glance: New shadow cabinet Profile: Alan Johnson

“I am grateful to Ed Miliband for giving me the opportunity to serve as shadow chancellor of the exchequer. He is proving to be a formidable leader of the Labour Party and has shown me nothing but support and kindness.

“My time in Parliament will now be dedicated to serving my constituents and supporting the Labour Party. I will make no further comment about this matter.”

BBC political editor Nick Robinson said it was clear Mr Johnson had not been “pushed out” because of his handling of the shadow chancellorship.

Mr Miliband said he had accepted the resignation “with great regret”, adding: “As shadow chancellor and a politician who held five cabinet positions, Alan showed real leadership on issues that mattered to families across our country, warning of the dangers posed by the government’s gamble on growth and jobs, promoting educational opportunity and delivering neighbourhood policing.

“Ed Balls is an outstanding economist and is hugely qualified to take our economic message to the country.”

In a BBC interview, he said: “Alan Johnson was the right man for the job. He’s had to stand down for personal reasons, nothing to do with the job.”

Shadow chancellor Alan Johnson

Mr Balls, who ran against Mr Miliband in last year’s Labour leadership contest, coming third, said: “It is a great honour to be appointed to this post, and to succeed my friend and colleague Alan Johnson whose commitment to social justice and service to the Labour Party is second to none.”

As Mr Miliband reshuffles his frontbench team, Douglas Alexander becomes shadow foreign secretary and Liam Byrne is made shadow work and pensions secretary.

Tessa Jowell becomes shadow Cabinet Office minister.

Sixty-year-old Mr Johnson, an MP since 1997, served as home secretary, health secretary and education secretary under Gordon Brown.

Conservative deputy chairman Michael Fallon said: “Alan Johnson is a good man and I wish him well. But what really beggars belief is the appointment of Ed Balls…

“He was Gordon Brown’s first lieutenant… [They] brought the government to the brink of bankruptcy.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Tyre arrests signal waste concern

Richard BlackBy Richard Black

Baled tyresUsed tyres are often “baled up” for packing into containers – or for illegal disposal
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Officers from the Environment Agency and City of London police have arrested three men on suspicion of “tyre fraud”.

Used tyres are supposed to be recycled if they cannot be re-used.

But there have been many reports of operations that appear either to be exporting unusable tyres overseas, or dumping them within the country.

These arrests conclude an eight-month investigation into a crime that the agency regards as on a par with illegal disposal of electronic or e-waste.

“The UK produces almost 50 million used tyres every year, and it is now illegal to send them to landfill – they should be recycled here in the UK,” said Andy Higham, the agency’s National Crime Team manager.

“But our intelligence suggests that illegal operators are charging tyre fitters to recycle old tyres here in the UK and then illegally exporting them overseas to avoid the recycling costs.

“As well as forcing other countries to deal with our waste, this practice also undermines legitimate tyre recycling businesses here in the UK.”

The main destinations for illegal exports are thought to include Hong Kong and Vietnam.

What makes them illegal is that both have exercised their right under international waste treaties to block the importation of tyres that are not fit for re-use.

In addition to the exports, some of the UK’s dodgy operators are dumping tyres at sites inside the country.

Several months ago, John Archbold leased one of his warehouses in Norfolk to a company that stocked the property with waste tyres.

“It then became apparent that they were not there any more,” he told BBC News.

“And when we went down we found they had gone and had filled the place up with tyres.”

The bill for disposing of the stock of at least 50,000 tyres may fall at Mr Archbold’s door.

“I’m not overly keen on putting my hand up and saying ‘we got done over’, but if it prevents someone else being caught in the same way, then at least some good may come of it,” he said.

The operation on Thursday detained a 60-year-old from Chelmsford, Essex, a 32-year-old from Spalding, Lincolnshire, and a 61-year-old from Swanscombe, Kent.

DCI Dave Clark, the senior investigating office for City of London Police, said: “This case is a prime example of how police and government organisations such as the Environment Agency are co-ordinating their efforts to stop people committing fraud.”

Tyres do not degrade; and there have been regular incidents of major fires at tyre dumps, which can take many days to put out.

Of the UK’s annual used tyre output, about a third are re-used with or without reconditioning; a further third are recycled into products as diverse as underlay and playground surfaces; about 10% form the lining for landfill sites, and the remainder are burned under strictly controlled conditions.

But as with e-waste, the costs associated with these streams are high enough to stimulate the evolution of a black market.

The Environment Agency is advising tyre fitters to be wary of contractors who will take tyres away for less than 50p per time.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Bombers kill many Iraqi pilgrims

Map

Two bomb attacks near the Iraqi holy city of Karbala have killed at least 45 people and injured more than 130, officials say.

The blasts occurred on two routes being used by pilgrims taking part in the Shia Muslim festival of Arbaeen.

Earlier, a suicide bomber killed at least three people in the central city of Baquba – the second deadly attack in the city in as many days.

Violence in Iraq has reduced in recent years, but attacks continue.

US forces formally ended their combat operations last August, ahead of a planned full withdrawal later this year.

More than a million pilgrims are expected to visit Karbala for Arbaeen, which is set to climax on Tuesday.

The festival marks 40 days since the anniversary of the death of the seventh-Century Imam Hussein, who is revered by Shias.

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Nanny in court on poison charge

Jacqueline GoldJacqueline Gold hired Allison Cox to look after her daughter

A West Sussex nanny has made a second court appearance charged with trying to poison Ann Summers boss Jacqueline Gold by lacing her food with screen wash.

Allison Cox, 33, is accused of three counts of administering poison with intent to annoy.

She was hired by multi-millionaire lingerie and sex toy tycoon Ms Gold, 50, to look after her child at her home in Whyteleafe, Surrey.

Ms Cox, of East Grinstead, will next appear in court on 3 February.

She was bailed following her first appearance at Redhill Magistrates’ Court on 5 January.

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Baron Cohen to make Saddam film

Sacha Baron CohenSacha Baron Cohen will co-write and produce the film under his Four By Two Films company
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Borat and Bruno actor Sacha Baron Cohen is to star in a comedy inspired by a book thought to be written by the former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein.

The Dictator is a loose adaptation of the novel Zabibah and the King, which was a best-seller in Iraq in 2000.

Paramount Pictures said the film would tell “the heroic story of a dictator who risked his life to ensure that democracy would never come to the country he so lovingly oppressed”.

It will be released on 11 May 2012.

Alec Berg, Jeff Schaffer and David Mandel – writers on Seinfeld and Curb Your Enthusiasm – have been recruited to pen the script.

The Dicator will be directed by Larry Charles, who worked with Baron Cohen on both the Bruno and Borat comedies.

Although Zabibah and the King was written under the pseudonym “The Author”, it is believed it was written by ghost-writers carefully supervised by Hussein.

Set in the 7th or 8th Century, the romance novel tells the story of a king who falls in love with a poor, married woman.

Later this year, Mamma Mia! star Dominic Cooper will be seen in The Devil’s Double playing Saddam Hussein’s son Uday and a man forced to impersonate him.

Last year it was confirmed that Baron Cohen, 39, would play Queen front man Freddie Mercury in an upcoming film biopic.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cartoonist ‘faced certain death’

Kurt Westergaard (pictured 14 January)Mr Westergaard was in the house with his grand-daughter when his front door was broken down
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A Danish cartoonist who caricatured the Prophet Muhammad has told a court in Aarhus that a man who broke into his home meant to kill him with an axe.

Kurt Westergaard, 75, was testifying against Somali defendant Mohamed Geele, 29, who told the court he only wanted to “frighten” the cartoonist.

Mr Westergaard said Mr Geele had hacked at the door of his panic room.

When police arrived, they shot and wounded the suspect, who denies charges of terrorism and attempted murder.

Mr Westergaard’s cartoon of a turban bomb was one of 12 published in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in 2005 that prompted protests among Muslims around the world.

Mr Westergaard first went into hiding but then decided to live openly in a heavily fortified house.

He said that he was in the house with his five-year-old grand-daughter on 1 January 2010 when his front door was broken down by Mr Geele.

His grand-daughter Stephanie also testified on Thursday, describing how she had thought Mr Geele was a thief and had asked him to go away.

Mr Westergaard told the court in Aarhus, on the second day of the trial, that he had feared being “slaughtered” by Mr Geele.

“He was like a religious, insane young man,” the cartoonist said of the man who entered his house, allegedly screaming “You must die! You are going to Hell!”.

“I believed he had entered the house as a holy warrior who wanted to kill an infidel.”

The cartoonist said he had locked himself in his panic room – a reinforced bathroom – leaving Stephanie alone in the living-room because his attacker was “after me, not the people around me”.

“He was chopping so violently with his axe on the bathroom door that it began to vibrate,” he said.

“It would have been certain death if he had managed to break it down.”

Mr Geele’s assertion that he had only meant to frighten the cartoonist was dismissed by Mr Westergaard, who called Mr Geele a “cowardly liar”.

Speaking in a video, Stephanie described the moments she had spent alone with Mr Geele before the police arrived.

“First I cried because he had broken the window,” she said.

“I really thought that he was a thief and I told him to go away. But he took nothing, just wrecked things.

“He looked at me and did nothing to me. He was very angry with the old man.”

The child added that Mr Geele had left when he heard police sirens.

A verdict in the case is expected early next month.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Transplant restores woman’s voice

Brenda Jenson

Doctors recorded Brenda Jensen’s first words – courtesy UC Davis and UCL

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A woman in the US is able to speak for the first time in 11 years after a pioneering voicebox transplant.

Brenda Jensen said the operation, which took place in California, was a miracle which had restored her life.

Thirteen days after the surgery she said her first words: “Good morning, I want to go home.”

It is the first time a voicebox and windpipe have been transplanted at the same time and only the second time a voice box has ever been transplanted.

What will her voice sound like?

Her new voice should sound very similar to her old one.

How people talk is a combination of the way the lips and tongue move as well as how the lungs and brain function.

Professor Martin Birchall, from UCL, said: “The larynx is a sound generator, acting like a reed in the clarinet. All of the other structures are the same, the only thing that’s changed is the reed.”

Ms Jensen, 52, had been unable to speak on her own since her voicebox was damaged during surgery in 1999.

The tube used to keep her airways open injured her throat and scar tissue stopped her breathing.

Since then, she has been unable to taste or smell food, could breathe only through a hole in her windpipe and could talk only with the help of an electronic voice box.

In October, surgeons at the University of California Davis Medical Centre removed the larynx (voicebox), thyroid gland and 6cm of the trachea (windpipe) from a donor body.

In an 18-hour operation this was transplanted into Ms Jensen’s throat and the team connected it to her blood supply and nerves.

Transplant graphic

Thirteen days later she was able to speak her first croaky words and is now able to talk easily for long periods of time.

Ms Jensen said: “This operation has restored my life. I feel so blessed to have been given this opportunity.

“It is a miracle, I’m talking, talking, talking, which just amazes my friends and family.”

She is also learning how to swallow again.

“Every day is a new beginning for me. I’m working so hard to use my vocal cords and train my muscles to swallow.

“I’ll probably never sing in a choir or anything, but it’s exciting to talk normally and I cant wait to eat and drink and swim again.”

Surgeons at workThe 18 hour operation was only the second voicebox transplant ever

Professor Martin Birchall, from University College London, who was part of the surgery team, said: “The larynx is one of the most sophisticated neuromuscular organs in the body.”

“We’ve learned that we can repair nerves to make even very complex organs function again. It’ll open the door to better facial transplants and will be extremely important as tissue engineering develops.”

A voicebox transplant might be life changing, but it is not lifesaving.

The procedure is rare, the only other documented case took place at the Cleveland Clinic in 1998.

Everyone who receives a transplant must take drugs to suppress the immune system for the rest of their lives.

These drugs can reduce life expectancy so are normally reserved for life saving procedures.

One of the reasons Ms Jensen was suitable for this transplant was because she was already taking immunosuppresing drugs after a kidney-pancreas transplant four years ago.

Professor Peter Belafsky, part of the surgical team, said: “Brenda was an exceptional candidate for the transplant because she was highly motivated.

“Anyone who’s met Brenda knows that she is a strong and determined individual with a terrific outlook on life despite the many physical challenges she’s faced over her lifetime.”

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Polite society’

Baroness Warsi, the chairman of the main party in Britain’s governing coalition, has said that anti-Muslim prejudice has “passed the dinner table test” and become socially acceptable in the UK.

Here are the views of Muslims from around Europe on whether they think anti-Muslim attitudes are now considered acceptable in their countries.

Sweden

Prof Anne-Sofie Roald, professor of religious studies at Malmo University and a Muslim convert

Anne-Sofie Roald

“Muslims feel accused and stigmatised – that’s why they creep into their own minority thinking”

I would say in Sweden there is much more sensitivity around this than, for example, in Denmark. Even when there was a suicide bombing in Stockholm, there was much in the media saying we should not blame Muslims and terrorists. Many were talking about him as one lonely person who was fed up with life and wanted to commit suicide.

In Sweden, there is this negative idea that we haven’t integrated immigrants in a proper way, which I think is not accurate. It becomes self-fulfilling, it makes Muslims feel there is no good in integrating.

I used to wear a headscarf but I found that my work was not being accepted or taken seriously. I had put myself in a situation where I isolated myself, whereas when I took my headscarf away and became very secular, I suddenly became part of society in a different way – I let myself be accepted.

Muslims feel accused and stigmatised – that’s why they creep into their own minority thinking: that we are discriminated against, they don’t like us. It is not only the majority discriminating against the minority, it is the minority isolating themselves from the majority. It’s not a coincidence that the [anti-Islam party] Swedish Democrats came about now – they are playing on this anti-Muslim sentiment.

Belgium

Sami Zemni, professor of political science at the University of Ghent

“More than half of the Flemish population said they had no problem with anti-Islamic views”

There is nothing new there. This kind of anti-Islamic sentiment has been going here for years with the [anti-immigration party] Vlaams Blok.

They suddenly realised that going on about anti-Islamic sentiment is easier than talking about racism. “We criticise a religion,” they say, “not the people themselves.” The argument they use has become widespread, and it has spread to all political parties.

There was a study in Flanders a year ago on anti-Islamic views – more than half of the Flemish population said they had no problem with anti-Islamic views. “It’s the Muslims’ fault because they are uncritical of their religion, which is backward,” they say.

“Muslims are anti-‘people who think differently’,” they say. “It’s because of their Islam, it’s not adapted to modernity.”

Germany

Kubra Yucel Gumusay, freelance journalist and columnist

“Racism has now become “salonfahig”, meaning it is acceptable in polite society”

Ever since Thilo Sarrazin’s book [which said Muslim immigrants were a drain on German society], people began to think that a group like Muslims are genetically incapable of being successful and integrating. He was trying to prove scientifically that having prejudice against Muslims was OK. Before this, people could not say those thoughts openly, but now it looks like there’s scientific proof for what they think.

My friends have stories of people shouting at them, being spat at, not getting seats in restaurants. A year ago people would have said this is not OK, but these days people just tolerate these situations. This for me is proof that being anti-Muslim is becoming OK in society, even in academic circles.

It does not matter if you are a practising Muslim or not, you just have to look like you’re from a country where Muslims are from.

We say racism has now become “salonfahig”, meaning it is acceptable in polite society.

I personally do not get upset, because it’s my work, even though I received a death threat a couple of days ago. But other Muslims – they feel personally affected. Many of my friends feel like leaving for the UK or Canada where things are better.

Italy

Mario Scialoja, retired Italian diplomat to the UN who converted to Islam, currently with the Islamic Cultural Central in Rome

Apart from in northern Italy, there is very little anti-Islamic feeling and there have been no acts of Islamophobia; it is not socially acceptable. Personally, I have no experience of such acts, but it might be different for immigrants from North Africa.

The absence of anti-Islamic feeling may be because, up to now, there has not been the kind of massive immigration seen in other large European countries such as France. It started much later in Italy than it did in other European countries, and this might explain the situation.

In northern Italy, where the right-wing Northern League is prevalent and they don’t like immigrants in general, ther emay be some anti-Islamic feeling. There have been some isolated incidents, such as when some stones were thrown at the mosque in Treviso, or when someone brought a pig before the mosque in Pisa.

The Netherlands

Laila al-Zwaini, Dutch-Iraqi lawyer specialising in Islamic law

We have many problems in our society related to immigrants, some with a Muslim background.

At a political level, and with the presence of the Freedom Party, which is supporting the government, the language on this issue has become very negative and confrontational. This particular party’s discourse has become mainstream when it comes to Muslims, and it’s very hard to counter. They’re looking for guinea pigs, not solutions.

It’s always about Muslims and we, Muslims, don’t take part in the debate. It’s nothing to do with Islam, but it’s framed that way. We all have different views on how to live as a Muslim.

For the first 20 years of my life, I wasn’t “a Muslim”, I was Dutch with an exotic background. But in the last 15 years, it has become a problem.

It is probably a matter of numbers. When the children of guest workers stayed and tried to integrate, suddenly they became more visible, and then there was 9/11, which made a huge difference.

Denmark

Naser Khader, MP in the Danish Conservative Party and founder of Democratic Islam Organisation

I do not agreed that we have anti-Muslim sentiment in Denmark. We have it among a few but it is not the general option.

To be anti-political Islam is not the same as being anti-Muslim. Our challenge is to underline that, as a Muslim, you have to accept that your religion is challenged, that any religion should be challenged. Any religion that does not accept criticism is, in my opinion, weak. It becomes stronger if you criticise it.

One of the most positive results of the cartoon crisis in Denmark is that we no longer say “the Muslims”. The Danish people discovered that there are different kinds of Muslims – and that the majority supported Denmark.

A well-known Danish company owner told me that before the cartoon crisis, he didn’t want to hire any Muslims – it was the same as accepting trouble, he said. The crisis was an eye-opener for him, it showed him that Muslims were Danish and were democrats. It made him more tolerant – before, we were a heterogonous group that only wanted trouble.

I and my friends established the Democratic Muslims Organisation for those Muslims in Denmark who are successful, who are educated, who are loyal to Denmark. Before they cartoon crisis they didn’t have a platform, they were not well-organised. But the Islamist groups were, so when the media went to speak to Muslims, they spoke to Islamists who only represented the minority.

I think you need a cartoon crisis in the UK!

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.